Netizen 24 NGA: Two arrested in Indonesia over death of maid

A picture of the allegedly abused maid sitting at the porch of the house.

KUPANG, Indonesia: Two people have been arrested in Indonesia on human trafficking charges in connection with the death of a maid allegedly abused by her employer in Malaysia, police and a lawmaker said Thursday.

Indonesian authorities said the employment recruiters â" an unidentified husband and wife â" used forged documents to send 20-year-old victim Adelina Sau to Malaysia in 2015.

The womanâs mother said she disappeared from their village in imp overished East Nusa Tenggara province after her family rebuffed a recruiterâs job offer for their daughter.

The domestic helper died on Sunday (Feb 11), a day after being rescued by a migrant workersâ protection group.

Her head and face were swollen and she had raw wounds on her hand and legs, a police document and a Malaysian lawmaker said.

"The doctors said the maid died of multiple organ failure," said Bukit Mertajam MP Steven Sim.

"She was made to sleep in the car porch near a dog which was on a leash ... It is a senseless loss of a life."

The Indonesian recruiters were taken into custody Wednesday (Feb 14) on trafficking charges, while another suspect is being pursued, police said.

A brother and sister, as well as their mother, who employed Adelina, have been arrested in Malaysia.

Some 2.5 million Indonesians work in neighbouring Malaysia.

In 2014, a Malaysian couple were sentenced to hang for starv ing their Indonesian maid to death.

The problem of helper abuse was highlighted the same year after photos of a Hong Kong-based Indonesian maid's brutal injuries went viral. Her employer was later jailed.

Adelina's body was scheduled to arrive in the provincial capital Kupang on Thursday evening.

Her mother, Yohana Banunaek, said a man she did not identify had come to their remote village about seven hours' drive from Kupang offering her daughter a job in Malaysia, but they refused.

"The man came again with all this fake paperwork and the next day we could not find Adelina. We believe she had gone with the man," Banunaek told AFP.

The mother said the falsified documents made it appear that Adelina was about six years older than she was.

"We urge Malaysia to bring justice for Adelina and for the perpetrators to get heavy punishments," said Lalu Muhammad Iqbal, an official at Indonesia's foreign affairs ministry.

Official Indonesian figures showed some 62 migrant workers from East Nusa Tenggara died last year while working in Malaysia, mostly illegally.

Adelina was the eighth death this year, though most were from accidents or illness, according to the data.